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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1933 Report Efforts to Prevent You from Voting at C.P. Headquarters! peer : ‘ . : eS ah } Ee Te es . wee ixse ei tee 2 3 HOW TO VOTE COMMU NIST:—Pull Down Al “?, a? Levers in Column —Every Hammer and Sickle—LEA VE THEM DOWN; Call Mass Funeral for|GUTTERS OF NEW YORK Six Negro Children Killed in Slum Fire NEW YORK, — The Browns' the League —hby del Harlem Workers Back Communis Puerto Rican Workers Will Poll Heavy Vote By Alberto E. Sanchez NEW YORK—T ish speaking ca $ for and the ze. The funeral will take| ace this afternoon at 1:30 at the| Baptist Church, Dean St. and : , Brooklyn 2 only two dates thi Span- are Roches Aldermar and Pedro M. Yr stand an excellent chance How to Vote on ing the offic for which tk running. Mass senti Amendments: two work a wanaplbieocipes eve | Fusion and ly Worker reprints today he bourge r s issued last week by rae up Be ction Campaign the following ne amendments and on totbe voted on today. glecting the de and Negro wor! vast majorit this district. = ‘ | all sorts of di 1—Yote “Yes” | squeeze votes from the w 1—Vote “Yes” | in every case nent No, 2--Igno posed by the mi Communist Pa Amendment No. 3—Vote “Y¥ Amendment No. 4—Vote “Yes” Local Law No, 10—Charter Revision —Vote “No” An int to carry tothe worke: were held. Hom Everywhere the speakers were recei' tion. When woman with evicted, Arma dro Ufire, | eee hee, andi | MINOR FOR MAYOR d with acclar Ni at Ni cas iNew York Housewives Fight Higher Prices YORK—Over 200 house- = Sra Ba a aie ry fe cer eols ONLY COMMUNISTS FIGHT FOR united to fight the rising cost sevelt’s hunger , the climax r meetings, is with the RELIEF, DECLARES ROBERT MINOR } + Aaah isxrammmte ster Taye | nti ™ 1) ‘ot one of the parties except the | munist has made the s effort to do ¢ population of New York, wh in a life-and-death cri banks, and by of J. P. Morgan Icolm D. Simpson, Co.—who, by the didetes ing way, was the chairman of the op oilah ae ing meeting of LaGuardia’s c situation. The city ion against | paign on Sept. 27. upported by — the/ is also time to remember that the McKee and the Socialist | ne set of Party—is regating and starving | the + the colored population. Discrimina- | .| only upon his refusal to accept they om in unemployment relief, the| I sake eal utal evictions and police ter-| ardia. And don’t forget|? that their reason for not ren satisfied to continue to rule the | through the old- St.,| chine is precis rns by direct | time of discontent they can’t entertaining program | The affair is for the | ction One of tre Com- on are being added to their egregatiom. the Communist Party de- ution in 4th nomic equality of the Negro people. | Only the Communist Party fights, In time of great distress and discontent | jand did fight from the beginning; for the Scottsboro boys framed up feucher pe given they have to have a demagogue as | mands ‘the social, political and eco-| Rally Communist | Vote; Watchers — | Must Guard Count’ (Continued from Page 1) Do not allow the election officials to send any worker out without voting. In the counting of the votes the greatest vigilance must be observed. Watchers should insist on the right to be present during the counting. It is important that all watchers take note of the number of votes regis- tered for each party’s candidate, es- pecially the Communist Party. Write these figures down and compare them with the official figures. Report im-| mediately on the count to the near-| est Communist Party headquarters, a | | list of which is given below. Report immediately to your sec- | tion election headquarters any dis- crimination, irregularity or fraud. The special Attorney Deputy Gen- erals chosen by the Communist | Party, will be stationed at these section headquarters. Be sure you have the telephone number of your headquarters. When you leave the polling place (if there is no phone | there) to telephone, your fellow | watcher can take your place inside the guard rail. Watchers will be relieved during | the day to enable you to vote in | your own district. | Each watcher is supplied by the | section election headquarters with | a mimeographed sheet on which he | | is to list the votes in his polling | | place at the end of the day. These final results must be phoned imme~ | diately, NOT to the section elec- | tion headquarters, but to the Com- | munist Election Campaign Com- | mittee at 799 Broadway, where any | of the following nine telephones can be used: STuyvesant 9-5557 GRamercy 5-8780 STuyvesant 9-0867 GRamercy 5-9537 STuyvesant 9-1042 GRamercy 5-1075 STuyvesant 9-3177 GRamercy 5-0857 STuyvesant 9-0576. No polling place in the workers’ neighborhoods should be left without Communist Party watchers. Watchers should report at 5 a.m. sharp at the headquarters nearest to} | his home. The following are the dis- | trict election headquarters: | MANHATTAN—567 Lenox Ave.; | 96 Avenue C; 114 Lexington Ave.; 27 W. 115th St.; 269 W. 25th St.; 501 W. 161st St. BROOKLYN—132 Myrtle Ave.; 1813 Pitkin Ave.; 1109 45th St.; 46 Ten Eyck St. es that LaGuardia , and with the mil- publicity he is get- would ensure the NBER OF HITT R |dia? If an; LS AFR i | working class I fi | ing E the unemployed. And every Com- pees | is a ‘Communi, munist vote adds to the strength of the revolutionary party which is ming the mass party of | lions of acres of wo ibaa Rta Ee Does Nazi Dirty Work | tins. it ‘ { . LaGu man were en 1 : . ee ue TaGuard) n working people and preparing the ‘ ; é LOG ES Vea will free them by the revolutionary book for « enemies ch the (yc the present Wall bankers’ demagogue. “The Communist Party platform on ovship and the estab- the true democracy c ary for a new order the dictatorship of the people. Printed in Germany, Boun that both LaGuardia and the Soc ist Party have paraphrased part of it.| p and r Feyl Ka tayama, Fe ‘d Complies with Red Leader, \t": lays Off 9,000 Dead at 74" DEARBOR h., Nov. 6.—Nine | thousand For ers were taken | | off the payrolls today as a step of |in 1897 he returned to Japan to take Compliance with the N.R.A. by Ford. ee nips an active part in the workers’ move- | They were told that they would be bruised eye from one of the men| ment. He organized the Japanese idle for a week, and then ag= whom he tried to speed-up last sum-| Metal Workers’ Union, published 9 | Org nuh write tine ig og ae Mee workers’ paper, “The World of Labor,” | 8¢red, with others being laid off for ‘The job came to Goldsmith through | he Ae one of the founders of the | a we the printing firm of Lenz & Riecker, | Social-Democratic Party of Japan. Actiially, many of these workers 15 ick . 2 | From 1898 to 1900 he was geni ae: yaks igs of 75 Varick St. and the contract ‘as general are laid off indefinitely, the inter. e vol- buckling greeting to the Wnited States in unbound sheets in orler to take advantage of the low- @ tariff when sent in this form. When the Daily Worker reporter @alied on Goldsmith yest morn- ing, the latter admitted he done the Nazi job. Seeking to justify his aid to the vicious Nazi propaganda apparatus in tm United States, Goldsmith said: “Of course, I am not in favor of Hiller, but I am always willing to take his money. What difference | Goes it make who does the job?” “I understand you are a Socialist Party member,” the “Daily” reporter observed. “Not now, I used to be,” Goldsmith ; Wo (Continued from Page 1) replied. The boss bookbinder was | was for the “tipping-in’ of American | Secretary of the metal union. He was formerly a member of the Central| inserts—calculated to disclaim the|!Tested in 1901 for publishing the| Under the N.R.A. auto workers are Committee of the Hungarian Fed-| anti-Semitic propaganda in the book | ™@nifesto and program of the Sceial| supposed to w 5 hours a week, eration of the Socialist Party. —into 20,000 volumes, ‘Thus far | Democratic Party. In 1903 he orga-| Ford have been working 40 “T didn’t think you'd do a job for| Goldsmith's firm has finished the | ized anti-militarist meetings and | hours. Ford was given per ion by | demonstrations in Tokio. General Johnson to retain the 40- Anti-Imperialist Fighter. | Sinee ep He was elected vice-president of | 14 the Amsterdam Congress of 1904, and) H& 4° voted against the participation of so- | the. Nazis,” the reporter suggested, “because I understand you are en- rolled Socialist in Amityville, Long Island, where you live.” “No, not in Amityville,” volun- job on a little more than 10,000. This most recent development fol- ‘d to lay off the 9,000, The is that those who do get jobs k have their wages 1s and espionage in the U. 8. teered Goldsmith agreeably, “but | On Oct. 7 the Daily Worker pub- | (4)ists in bourgeois governments, for| ced in half, in eee cons tase og Men pret eee ee | Russo-Japanese war, demonstratively| ‘The same process of mass layoffs ‘The i ie ‘al with | Ng tk agents of e _Priends | shaking hands with Plekhanov | 4s going on in every industry in the anti-Semitism, is being circulated by | of New G ny” to their superiors g ‘ 'y e | In 1905 he edited a socialist. paper In this official letter W./in Japan, and again the N.R.A. Ford said “American Section of Interna- ° i coun unde onal mbat Worl sited America. |he y ing with the N.R.A, tional Committee to Combat World’) Haag, adjutant to Heinz Spanknoe-| tn 1912 he was imprisoned as one of | ; ” f eae ne prisoned as one of |and that “ 4 cline in pro- Menace of Communism,” an chief Hitler agent in the United| the organizers of the Tokio tramway | soayen mad caaiontag k | Mery of the National Civic Federa- | tion. Ralph M. Easley is head of | both organizations, which have been financial support from some States, admitted that Marinus van} workers’ strike. Persecuted by der Lubbe, the Reichstag fire de-| Japanese authorities in 1913, he re | fendant, is _a tool of the Nazis; he} turned to America, where he w rked | urged his German colleagues to in-| in San Francisco as a laborer and | large number of workers. Williana Burroughs’ the leading open-shop manufac- | oculate the Communist defendants| edited a socialist magazine. In De- | ,y *115, in the U. Ss. | with syphilis; he arranged for the| cember, 1916, he organized a left Name Spelled William Matthew Woll, vice-president of | importation of a Nazi woman spy to/ socialist group in New York. In 1919 | on Voting Machine NEW -The name of Wil- Nana Communist can- didate for Comptroller, is: misspelled the American Federation of Labor be put in Amtorg, the Soviet trade which at its recent convention | agency in the U. S., and spoke of fm Washington adopted a resolu- | arrangements to spread Hitler propa- them for the boycott of German | ganda in the U,. S. acting president of the | On Oct. 28 the Daily Worker pub- Civic Federation. lished two more secret letters, writ- | Sixty workers are employed by! ten by Ralph Easley of the National Goldsmith and Altman—40 of them | Civic Federation to Grover Whalen, women and 20 men. Some of the| New York N. R. A. chief, and to he organized a Japanese Communist group in New York, and a class for the study of Communism. He went to Moscow in 1921, and was elected a member of the Execu- tive Committee of the Communist International. In 1927 he was elected a member of the presidium of the | first Internaional Congress of he ting machine listing the es of the Communist Party, fifth row, alongside the letter workers are members of Local 25 General Hugh Johnson, Federal N. Pe eeersiey setae oe sie the SBookbinders and Printers | R. A. Administvator, urging that the| , Matayama was vice-president of| The Board of Hlections issued a Baion of the American Federation | Daily Worker's fight against the N.| the Executive Committee of the In-| statem: 1 published in gf Labor. Working a 40-hour week, | tome of them get as little as $14-$15. | Once Got Shiner the capital error. The Commu: R. A. be used as an argument against | U. S, relations with the Soviet Union, | and demanding the “squelching” of | ternational Labor Defense. MINOR FOR MAYOR correcting this Election Cam- Goldsmith's activity in urging his | the Daily Worker. | board to reprint the entire list of Workers to voie Socialist, it is re-| On Oct. 30, the “Daily” exposed the | NOTICE New York City candidates because by workers in the shop, has| distribution of the Nazi propaganda | ‘OST WALLET at 16th Anniversary Mect-| the working masses would have to | ing at Arcadia Hall, Broo! Return to Daily n, Sunday | office. Prevented him from getting a’ book by Fasley, Fish, etc evening. pay the final cost. Worker WATCHERS: REPOR? TO VARIOUS SECTION H TOR YN : > Y " 7. the bankers’ candidate for Mayor. | * ‘ injJGR FOR M AY OR y. /LaGuardia is the bankers’ dema-| ane condemned to death in Alabama. | : me : Seen ie ae - | soewe.” | oe veers of New York know this, ral Tr 7 T : and wil accordingly. MPT HY | “The foolish McKee called ta-|°"2 vil vole accordingly a ah Ra g id : ‘Every vote cast for the Com. Sh SAcER BLU ES co Fi) Guardia a ‘Communist at heart.’| munist Party ticket is a thousand I | Does McKee want to elect LaGuar-| dollars taken from the pocket of a RI Ud persuade the “banker and put in the pockets of Vote Communist!” Dearborn Plant um” Burroughs on the face | paign Committee did not request the | STATEN ISLAND—25 Elizabeth | St. W. Brighton. | BRONX — 1157 Southern Blvd.; | 699 Prospect Ave.; 2075 Clinton Ave.; 615 E. 140th St.; 358 Morris Ave. JAMAICA—148-29 Liberty Ave. LONG ISLAND CITY—42-06 27th Street. YONKERS—27 Hudson St. | For further information phone the Communist Election Campaign office at 799 Broadway, Room 526, | GRamercy 5-8780 or STuyvesant 9-5557. “Defend your Party's vote!” . NEW ‘YORK.—Three important announcements were made by the Communist Election Campaign Com- | mittee yesterday as follows: 1, That all workers who find it} absolutely impossible to report at 5 a, m. as watchers should not fail to | report to the various section eleetion headquarters as soon thereafter as they can to relieve other watchers today. 2. Volunteers are needed at the main election headquarters, 799 | Broadway, Room 526, to answer phone calls from workers ell day and receive voting reports of watchers after 6 p.m. 3. All that have automobiles are urged to use them at the various sec- tion election headquarters for rush- jing the Communist deputy generals to places where they are needed. as Aree CANDIDATES HAVE RIGHT TO ENTER POLUING PLACES ANY TIME TOMORROW NEW YORK.—The Communist Election Campaign Committee an- nounced that all candidates for of- fice have the right to enter any poll- ing place in their Assembly Districts at any time during the day they choose to guard their bollots during | the voting today. \ Nightingale 4-2384 | DR. J. JOSEPHSON | Surgeon Dentist with the 1 W. 0. 207 East 14th Street New York City (near Third Avenue) Formerly (Brooklyn) |] FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE | | Williamsburgh Comrades Weleome De Luxe Cafeteria | 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. | EVERY BITE A DELIGHT | WORKERS—EAT AT THE | settlement, the companies will have ‘Shoe Strikers Vote §,000 Miners Return to Captive Pits as. Strike Is Betrayed PITTSBURGH, Pa.,” Nov. 6,— Ac- cording to scattered reports, 6,000 miners have returned to work in Fayette county today, The Frick Coke Co., U. S, Steel Corporation subsidy, declared it was working for “gradual resumption of operations,” meaning a selective pro- | cess of intimidation and forcing min- ers in the company union and black- listing others. Hynes, president of U.M.W.A. Dis- trict 4, pleaded for immediate return. “Men,” he declared, “I plead with you as men with wives and children, that unless you yote to accept the hordes of deputies to see that those | who will can work, and there will) be lots of widows and orphan chil- dren as a result,” Martin Ryan, so-called insurgent | leader of the miners in the captive pits, led his local to work, proving in action his treacherous role. Fighting Bob Minor for Mayor. to End Strike When | Their Terms Are Met (Continued from Page 1) stated without discrimination, until work is distributed equally and wages are adjusted to provide increases for every worker and until the bosses have entered these terms on paper and signed their names to an agree- ment with each shop committee re- spectively.” Biedenkapp presented to the} strikers the decision of the National Labor Board in full, analyzing every section of the agreement. “It is not a 100 per cent victory,” Biedenkapp declared. “But out of our 14 weeks’ strike, we have won certain victories. We have signed up 76 shops, involv- ing 6,000 workers, under union con- ditions and we have forced the Na- tional Labor Board to make certain commessions on paper which we will compel the bosses through our or- ganized force and our solidarity to put into effect.” “We accept the decision of the National Labor Board but declare that the wages provided will not fur- nish a living wage for the strikers and that all wage adjustments must be on the basis of a decent standard. We protest against the decision which declares that no workers ‘con- victed of committing violence or de- struction of property shall be rein- stated, as it opens the doors wide to framing up the workers in order to discriminate against the most ac- tive union men and deny the right to work.” Referring to the election on Jan- uary 2, Biedenkapp declared that the delay was a trick intended to break the solidarity of the workers. “We go back to the shops organized and we will prepare to meet any attempts to disrupt our ranks from within. We will vote on January 2 and the National Labor Board is invited to be present. But the Board will get its answer and after that, we expect the Board to recognize its own deci- sion by recognizing the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union.” The strikers meet tomorrow to elect their shop committees to meet with the bosses and they will report back to the union, the decisions before any movement to the shops begins. The National Labor Board deci- sion, made after weeks’ of conference with the N.R.A., after the obvious tactics of discouraging the strikers by delays and after injunctions and arrests had failed to demoralize their ranks, contains the following terms: 1. The workers are to be rein- stated without discrimination. nS 2. There shall be equal division | of work with the exceniion that where this is a “hardship,” the board grant exemptions. Workers “con- victed of the commission of violence or the destruction of property” are net to be reinstated. 3. An election is to be held on} January 2, 1934, each shep under. the Board's supervision to select the rep- resentatives of the workers. Con- tracts with unicns since the strike, where the majority of the strikers did not return to work, are held in- valid. 4. Wages and hours shall be sub- ect to collective bargaining, after the elections. Pending this the workers shall elect their own shop committees to represent them. 5. Wages shall be increased by 10 per cent over the 48-hour sca‘s prior to the strike and hours shall be re- duced to 40, 5. Disputes are to be submitted to the National Labor Board for fins] decision, WILLIAM BELL orrrcra, Optometrist °F THE Ww. 0. Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn, N, ¥. | Near Hopkinson Ave, | 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. ©. Gre ad Where Ring Lardner Stood , The praise which was heaj his work throughout the years criminating as unanimous. tion of America’s great middlec the inclination to be primarily & absorbed in sports. During the decisive, years of his liter- ary development he wrote baseball for a number of papers and this so circumscribed his medium that | even after his “liberation” to free lancing he was unable overcome, his stifling limitations. To be sure, he chafed under these limitations and the chafing introduced new elements into the handling of his themes, sardonic, even sour ele- ments, which refined and lent im- portance to his best work. Ring Lardner’s writing is clear cut, stylized, and falls readily into categories. Read “Round Up,” the representative collection of his short stories and you will note his persistent preoccupation with two basic themes. One, the grotesque- ness, aberrations, “color,” but fun- damental integrity of baseball as a profession. Two, the utter sham, inanity and fundamental meanness on which bourgeois existences are based. His treatment of bridge, golf and baseball are the touchstones of his attitude. Lardner has written many stories about bridge but not a one | in which the social by-products of this social by-product are extolled. Those bridge stories most flagrant- ly represent a form of wish-ful- fillment characteristic of Lard- ner’s witing. OTe, saat RIDGE is the great indoor sport of the American mid- dle cl. Around it hover the traditions the social life formerly associated with sewing circles, “social even sens and musicales. Sartorial ostenta- tion, irritating small talk, the smugness of overheated rooms, that’s bridge. Lardner saw how | the game could be enjoyable but not with those trimmings. His own social life had snatched him away from the lowly poker but it could not prevent him from writing those murderous pieces about bridge. Himself, he was taciturn and polite. He had no special respect for the four hundred, but the nouveau riche, who criticized his game got under his ski: It wasn’t as though an experienced old-timer was breaking in a rookie pitcher. There wos & snootiness here that went be- yond the gam>. So Shelton, the Lardner hero, busts up the evening by criticiz- ing in turn the hosis’ manners, | their grammar and pronunciation. | He’s thrown out, but happy. Lard- ner, in real life, sat through and; suffered. | Lardner was on the. inside; he } had the goods on his civilization. Read his “Nora” and “A Day With Conrad Green’? to find out how plays are produced; read his | | “Rhythm” to learn how popular songs are written, his “Love Nest” | for the dope on Hollywood glamor. | * * * ESE are bold and skeletal s: tires, but accurate in their | salient aspects. Sometimes, rare- _ ly, Lardner was tolerant in his treatment, but he was, after all, one of the boys. For the man of \ CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. PHONE BEACON 731 Now Open for Fall and Winter 60 Rooms--Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in each room WHOLESOME FOOD, REST, SPORTS, CULTURAL ACTIVITIES For information call Easterbrook 8-1400 CARS LEAVE Cooperative Restaurant 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 a.m. OT enough has been said about Ring Lardner. ped upon him after his death a few weeks ago was no less lavish than that which accompanied and this praise was as indis- Lardner was the product and the contradiction of that sec- lass which has the leisure and letters he had the genial con- tempt which people reserve for individuals of their own craft. “Brainard,” the Lardner writer, decides to end it all but is per- suaded with ridiculous ease not | not jump overboard. He sticks around and does a novel instead. Of course Lardner’s general contempt for people extended to his fighters and ball players. Of course they are just as prone to satorial ostentation and small talk. But infused into their sa- tirical treatm: ji ffection and sense of identification that makes all the difference in the world. In his golf stories Ring Lardner’s “I” is always the chauffeur or the caddy. ee ee | ING LARDNER was steeped in the prejudices of his class and craft to an ext which precluded his achieving more than a ne; sought no way out of his prob- lems because his unhappiness was never too pressing and he had no idea there was a solution. He is to be admired for his skill. His influence on the Westbrook Peglers, useful in a similar way, and his remarkable honesty. With all their fatal limita- tions, the Ring Lardners, Sin- clair Lewises and Sherwood An- Adersons were inevitable and requisite the development of a revolutionary attitude in liter- ature and im sport. They have served to tear down our faith in certain institutions. Lardner h: b more intelligent than Lewis insofar as he made no attempt to offer a new set of values. He knew he didn’t have it. What he was too skeptical to know was that he uprooted weeds that will be the fertilizer in the growth of a new and healthy plant. ‘ive satirical art. He Helping the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the credit of Edward Newhouse in his effort to catch up in the Socialist competition with Michael Gold, Dr. Luttinger, Helen Luke, Jacob Burck and Del! to raise $1,0C@ in the $40,000 Dally | Worker Drive: | United Front Supporters. .$ |M. Freimar ., 1.80 » 1.00 2.00 Theatre Club Previous total .. TOTAL TO DATE DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET - Bet. Pitkin utter Aves., Brooktyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Offies Hours: 8-10 A.M, +s PM. I. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AVE. Phone: Night Phone: Dickens 6-5269 For Internati Workers Order TRADE UNION DIRECTORY::. CLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION 28 Second Avenue, New York Ott Algonquin 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York City | Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL $18 Broadway, New Xark Olly Gramercy, 5-8958 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 35 East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 71-7842 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 181 West 28th Sireet, New York City Lackawanna $-4010 Dancing ’till 3 A. M. and Revue Variety Artists A Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8937 gcse EADQUARTERS THIS MORNING AT WELCOME LITVINOV CELEBRATION Master of Ceremonies: DR. PAUL LUTTINGER Two Hot Bands Professional Entertainment Friday, Nov. 10—Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. ‘TICKETS ON SALE at Workers’ Bookshop, 50 E. 13th St., Friends of the Soviet Union, 799 B.way, Rm. 233 Auspices: Friends of the Soviet Union, 799 Broadway, Rm. 233, N. Y. City Group of 20 Native African Dancers —— ADMISSION 50c——-— 5 O'CLOCK j | i ‘